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Sunday, April 29, 2012

We Are All Nuns - NYTimes.com

These two op-ed editorials were in NY Times today, 29 Apr 2012.  They both focused on the way the Catholic Church has treated nuns.   It is interesting that the bishops expressed more outrage over some scholarly suggestions from the nuns, than they did over the pedophile priests and abuse of young men and women by priests, and the subsequent cover-ups.

We Are All Nuns - NYTimes.com:

Bishops Play Church Queens as Pawns

There is a petition at: http://www.change.org/petitions/support-the-sisters

Incredible Shrinking Country - NYTimes.com

This is an interesting article that points out the problems involved with the lower birth rate and aging population.

Incredible Shrinking Country - NYTimes.com:

I'm also interested in reading the book: Children of Men --a 1992 book by P. D. James

Sunday, April 22, 2012

EDITORIAL: Time to tweak Prop. 13

EDITORIAL: Time to tweak Prop. 13  Editorial in today's NC times addressed the issues very well -- Our legislature needs to have some guts and make some serious changes in prop 13.

Single-payer: If Obamacare is struck down, will the nation reconsider single-payer health care? - Baltimore Sun

I would have much rather preferred that our Government institute a Government-run healthcare system.  It is interesting that now even doctors are thinking the same thing.  This Obamacare concept is a compromise with the insurance industry that continues an expensive and wasteful layer of insurance companies which distort and sub-optimize the delivery of healthcare.  It also continues the expensive financial drain of liability insurance and lawsuits from scarce medical care resources.

Single-payer: If Obamacare is struck down, will the nation reconsider single-payer health care? - Baltimore Sun:

Friday, April 20, 2012

Protect Our Data! A Digital Consumer Bill of Rights | PCWorld

Protect Our Data! A Digital Consumer Bill of Rights | PCWorld:

PC World editor, Mark Sullivan has written several editorials in PC World.  He has also posted a video: http://www.pcworld.com/article/250251/a_digital_consumer_bill_of_rights.html

His editorial in February 2012 hit the nail on the head!  However his editorial in the “Consumer Watch” section of the May 2012 PC World issue focused down on the critical issues:
1. We have the right to know what any internet company plans to do with our data
2. The data we store or post “in the cloud” is our property. The internet company doesn’t gain rights to it by posting it on their web site
3. We have the right to expect reasonable protection of our data
4. If the Government wants to monitor our digial transmissions, they should get a search warrant first

Prior to computers, when a person was suspected of committing a crime, law enforcement could obtain a search warrant.  With that warrant, usually police would grab the suspects files and notebooks, bank records, photos etc.  After everyone started getting computers, the police would focus on hard drives of the suspect’s computers.  Generally that contained most of the critical evidence, since data was moving from paper to computers.  Now everything is moving to the “cloud” or smartphone.  Because of this, we now need the same protections for our digital data that we have always had for our other personal property and information.  I believe the intent of our Bill of Rights was to protect this information.  

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Gaza man killed by soldiers as thousands protest Israel policy - CSMonitor.com

Israel seems to be able to keep the Palestinian dispute alive by continually fighting terrorism with terrorism.  Their actions are about the same as the other despots
Gaza man killed by soldiers as thousands protest Israel policy - CSMonitor.com: